6533b861fe1ef96bd12c5779
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Molecular cause and functional impact of altered synaptic lipid signaling due to a prg‐1 gene SNP
Lianyong QiaoSebastian RichersPetr UnichenkoSergei KirischukPeter NürnbergHeiko J. LuhmannJohannes VogtGeorg WintererJin ChengArian MobascherAlbrecht StrohJenq-wei YangGuilherme HortaMohammad R. ToliatCarine ThalmanSergiu GropaRobert NitschUte DistlerNerea FerreirósNassim SahragardHarald BinderYunbo LiKonstantin RadyushkinStefan TenzerAndrew J. MorrisIrmgard TegederJan BaumgartKlaus LiebXingfeng LiuOliver TüscherJisen Huaisubject
0301 basic medicineGeneticseducation.field_of_studySensory gatingPopulationGlutamate receptorLipid signalingBiologyCell biologySynapse03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compound030104 developmental biology0302 clinical medicinemedicine.anatomical_structurechemistryLysophosphatidic acidmedicineMolecular MedicineSignal transductionAutotaxineducation030217 neurology & neurosurgerydescription
Loss of plasticity-related gene 1 (PRG-1), which regulates synaptic phospholipid signaling, leads to hyperexcitability via increased glutamate release altering excitation/inhibition (E/I) balance in cortical networks. A recently reported SNP in prg-1 (R345T/ mutPRG-1) affects ~5 million European and US citizens in a monoallelic variant. Our studies show that this mutation leads to a loss-of-PRG-1 function at the synapse due to its inability to control lysophosphatidic acid (LPA) levels via a cellular uptake mechanism which appears to depend on proper glycosylation altered by this SNP. PRG-1 +/ mice, which are animal correlates of human PRG-1 +/mut carriers, showed an altered cortical network function and stress-related behavioral changes indicating altered resilience against psychiatric disorders. These could be reversed by modulation of phospholipid signaling via pharmacological inhibition of the LPA-synthesizing molecule autotaxin. In line, EEG recordings in a human population-based cohort revealed an E/I balance shift in monoallelic mutPRG-1 carriers and an impaired sensory gating, which is regarded as an endophenotype of stress-related mental disorders. Intervention into bioactive lipid signaling is thus a promising strategy to interfere with glutamate-dependent symptoms in psychiatric diseases.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2015-12-15 | EMBO Molecular Medicine |